The State House Portrait and Art Collection
The South Carolina State House and grounds of the Capitol
Complex are home to many beautiful portraits, monuments, plaques and other
works of art. These works honor the many of the people and events that are an
important part of the history of South Carolina and the United States.
History
Charles C. Wilson of Columbia, who was the last architect of
the State House, proclaimed South Carolina's State House "one of the most
notable buildings of the world." Its Corinthian capitals, which had been
designed by Major John R. Niernsee, were, said Wilson, "wonderful, nothing
finer in France or Italy." The building was Niernsee's "life
work." But his death prevented him from completing it, and subsequent
architects departed from vital particulars of his plans.
The move toward construction began on December 15, 1851,
when the State laid the cornerstone for a "Fire Proof Building" to
house its records safely. In 1852, the General Assembly appropriated $50,000 to
complete that building and to begin the next section for use as the "New
State Capitol." P.H. Hammerskold was the project architect, but in May
1854, the State dismissed him for "concealments and misrepresentations and
general dereliction of duty."
On August 3, 1854, the State appointed Niernsee as
architect, Niernsee examined Hammerskold's work and found it and the materials
Hammerskold had used both defective and wholly unsuitable. The work was
dismantled; the loss totaled $72,267.
On November 27, 1854, Governor John L. Manning recommended
erecting a new State Capitol with north and south exposures at the intersection
of Senate and Main (then Richardson) Streets. He thought that, "if change
of location be made, in the end, perhaps it may not be a subject much to be
regretted that delay and disaster attended the first efforts to construct a new
Capitol for the commonwealth." The General Assembly acted on Governor
Manning's recommendation, changed the site, and ordered a design with wings
extending east and west.
Niernsee planned to complete the building in five years. By
1857, it rose to the top of the basement window-heads. On October 1, 1860,
Niernsee reported that the structure had risen nearly sixty-six feet above the
foot of the foundation and that the "absolute value of the work put into
the building" was $1,240,063. "The Corinthian granite capitals, some
64," he said, were "being executed in a style and finish heretofore
unequalled in that line."
Work on the new State House was suspended when Sherman's
army destroyed Columbia on February 17, 1865. Shells from Sherman's cannons,
which were of light calibre, damaged the building only slightly, and brass
markers were subsequently placed on the west and southwest walls of the building
to show where the shots had landed. Ten were fired in all. Six "struck the
western front," with little damage "except one which shattered the
moulded windowsill and balusters of the 2d window (from the northern end) of
the Hall of the House of Representatives." Four struck the interior of the
building.
More devastating was the fire that destroyed the old State
House. Niernsee reported it cracked five "bells of St. Michael's Church,
Charleston," which had been "sent up here some time ago" and
"deposited under one of the sheds." It consumed the valuable State
House library, offices, and workshops, a vast quantity of finished marble and
rough material, estimated by Niernsee to be worth $700,000, and Niernsee's
library of architectural and scientific books, engravings, and several thousand
drawings, the result of his practice of twenty-five years. "These,"
said Niernsee, along with "one of the latest and best busts of
Calhoun" and all the valuable detail State House drawings, contracts, and
so forth, which had accumulated during Niernsee's ten years on the job,
"were utterly swept away during that terrible night--an irreparable
loss."
All that remained of Niernsee's drawings were several prints
of a perspective view and one full-sized detail of a Corinthian capital. This
perspective and evidence in the building itself, however, indicate Niernsee's
concept of the completed structure. His plan did not contemplate a dome that
looked anything like the dome on today's building. His was a lofty and finely
proportioned tower, which rose one hundred eighty feet from the ground through
the center of the building supported by piers and arches; it was "a
rectangular lantern," somewhat pyramidal in outline, and thirty feet
square at the base; its projected cost was $200,000.
Niernsee returned to Columbia to resume his work as
architect of the State House in 1885, but he died on June 7. He was succeeded
by a former associate, J. Crawford Neilson, of Baltimore. On October 1, 1888,
his son, Frank Niernsee, took over and worked largely on the interior until
construction was again suspended, this time about 1891.
In 1900, Frank P. Milburn became architect. He hired the
contracting firm of McIlvain and Unkefer, replaced the roof, and built the
present dome and north and south porticos for about $175,000. Senator J. Q.
Marshal of the State House Commission protested Milburn's appointment, however,
and launched an investigation of the work. The investigation ended when the
State brought suit against Milburn and his contractor, but the case ended in a
mistrial and was not retried.
A joint legislative committee, after calling in Captain
S.S.Hunt, the superintendent of construction of the United States Capitol,
characterized the dome as infamous. "No uglier creation could be
devised," it lamented, "and it is nothing short of a miserable
fraud."
On April 8, 1904, the State elected Charles C. Wilson of
Columbia as architect. Wilson worked on the terrace and steps of the north
front and made sundry improvements to the interior. His work continued for
several years and cost about $100,000.
Wilson, who admired Niernsee's design, described the style
as "Roman Corinthian, with considerable freedom and distinguished
originality in much of the detail. The workmanship of Maj. Niernsee's
time," he said, "is exceptionally fine, indicating not only his great
genius but the enthusiastic cooperation of mechanics of the highest skill and
integrity. ...All credit for this noble and dignified building is due to the
original designer and architect, Maj. John Niernsee. It is due him and to
future generations of South Carolinians that it be protected from further
departure from his design, and in good time, in the state's future prosperity,
it is not too much to hope that it may yet be restored to his ideal."
Although all legislative records for the building are not
available, those that are show the General Assembly appropriated at least
$3,540,000 for its construction over the years. The granite for the structure,
according to Alexander S. Salley, who wrote a history of the State House in the
early-twentieth century, came mostly from the Granby quarry, which was located
about two miles south of the State House.
The State House Renovation
Inside and out, from foundation to dome, the State House, as
a result of the 1995-98 renovation, is in better shape than ever before. The
work balanced the need to meet modern code requirements and improved efficiency
against a respect for historic form and appearance. Most visitors will never
see the structural improvements, the sophisticated electrical wiring, alarm
systems, or the state-of-the-art earthquake isolators that were installed.
However, everyone will notice the renewal of the House and Senate chambers, the
19th century treatment of the lobby, the vaulted brickwork in the hallways of
the lower floor, the restored marble floors and refurbished interior of the
dome.
The Stevens and Wilkinson architectural firm of Columbia
developed the renovation plan; Caddell Construction Co. Inc., of Montgomery,
Alabama was the prime contractor for the project. The cost of the renovation
was $51, 530, 000.
You can take a Self-Guided tour of the State House Grounds
by picking up a tour brochure at the Columbia Regional Visitors Center. Free
guided and self-guided tours are available of the State House Monday through
Friday. Guided tours are also available the first Saturday of each month. Tours
begin on Saturdays at 9:30 am and continue each hour on the half hour with the
last tour beginning at 3:30, exluding the 12:30 time slot. Call (803) 734-2430
to make your reservation for groups of more than 10 people.
